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Toward the Sunrise: An Until the Dawn Novella
Toward the Sunrise: An Until the Dawn Novella
Toward the Sunrise: An Until the Dawn Novella
Ebook170 pages2 hours

Toward the Sunrise: An Until the Dawn Novella

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Julia Broeder is only six months shy of graduating from the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania when one small decision spirals out of control and results in her expulsion. Hoping to travel the world as a missionary doctor, her only choice is to return back home . . . or throw herself upon the mercy of Ashton Carlyle.

Formal and straight-laced, Ashton is not pleased to see an expelled Julia arrive at his Manhattan office. His position as an attorney for the Vandermark family's world-famous shipping empire entails taking care of the Broeders, longtime employees of the Vandermarks. But Ashton has no intention of using his employer's resources in defense of Julia's impulsive and reckless actions.

What Ashton does not expect are a scathing reprimand from none other than the Vandermark family patriarch and the bewildering resistance from Julia herself when he's forced to change his tune. At an impasse, Ashton and Julia are unprepared for the revelations that arise or the adventure that awaits them.

In this novella, award-winning novelist Elizabeth Camden introduces readers to the world of the grand Hudson River Valley estate Dierenpark and the enigmatic Vandermark family. Includes an extended preview of Until the Dawn, Camden's full-length Dierenpark novel.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 6, 2015
ISBN9781441269829
Author

Elizabeth Camden

Elizabeth Camden is a RITA and Christy Award winning author. A research librarian at a small college in central Florida, she has published several scholarly articles and four nonfiction history books. Her ongoing fascination with history and her love of literature have led her to write inspirational fiction. She lives with her husband near Orlando, Florida. For more information, visit elizabethcamden.com.

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Rating: 4.043859682456141 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Elizabeth Camden is a new author for me. However, I've heard amazing things about her books from my fellow avid reader friends, and when I had the opportunity to check her book out, I jumped at it. Toward the Sunrise is an ebook novella, currently free on Amazon and Christianbook. It's meant to be an introduction of sorts to her next novel, Until the Dawn. And quite the introduction it is.We are introduced to the Vandermark estate in the Hudson River Valley in New York, which makes me think of the Vanderbilts. I've visited several Vanderbilt estates in the past few years and I can imagine the scenery described in Toward the Sunrise. We get glimpses of characters that are sure to be present in the full novel, Until the Dawn, and simply can't wait. For Julia and Ashton, I enjoyed their story and found humor in their interactions, especially when the goats were involved. Their romance is one that somehow spanned years, without either one of them knowing, but it gave depth to characters. I actually would love to hear more about them, even in passing in the next book(s) to see how they're doing. Plus there is one question that I hope to have answered more thoroughly.A lovely introduction that is a fine story in itself. After reading Toward the Sunrise, you'll want to read the full novel set in a mysterious estate as Dierenpark with a powerful family as the Vandermarks.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Sweet book with realistic, well-written characters. It never felt flat or forced. Will be reading more from this author!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A story that explains some ways that people learned to cope in this world
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This historical fiction novella of a female about to graduate from The Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania touched my heart in multiple ways as my mother graduated from The Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania Hospital School of Nursing and was a US Cadet Nurse at this hospital during WWII. I was born at this hospital.I loved reading Julia Broeder's story and couldn't wait to see if her hopes and dreams would come true and what part a NY lawyer would play in her life.I also learned a few things about goats that was interesting as I've really never had any direct interaction with goats. They are a recent addition to a horse farm up the street from our home and since reading the novella I've given them an extra glance or two as I drive by when they're out and about in the different pastures.I'm looking forward to reading more of this author's historical fiction writing.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Toward the Sunrise is a sweet fast novella, and a page-turner at that. We are at the end of the nineteenth century and we have a young woman in college near the end of her degree of becoming a doctor.Not only is Julia on the cutting edge of being a woman doctor, she has way too much spunk for one so young. There is something strange about the way she was able to afford to go to medical school. Her father was a groundskeeper at the Vandermark estate, and for some reason one of the lawyers for the Vandermark’s, Ashton Carlyle, is told to do all possible to help her.In the end I wondered if she was ever going to get a medical degree, or maybe a Veterinarian? She ends up helping dogs and goats, and Ashton ends up doing a lot more than he thought he would in order to make her dreams come true.There is also a beginning of a new book that is coming out featuring a character we meet named Sophia. I really enjoyed reading this and was done way to soon!I received this Novella through Bethany House Publishers and was not required to give a positive review.

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Toward the Sunrise - Elizabeth Camden

© 2015 by Dorothy Mays

Published by Bethany House Publishers

11400 Hampshire Avenue South

Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

www.bethanyhouse.com

Bethany House Publishers is a division of

Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan

www.bakerpublishinggroup.com

Ebook edition created 2015

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

ISBN 978-1-4412-6982-9

Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Bible.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Cover design by Jennifer Parker

Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright Page

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Preview of Until the Dawn

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About the Author

Books by Elizabeth Camden

Back Ad

NOVEMBER 1897

Sometimes ten seconds is all it takes to change the course of a life.

Julia Broeder had learned that lesson the hard way last week when an impulsive decision triggered a string of events that now had her waiting on this hard bench outside the conference room at the Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania. Behind the closed conference-room door sat the twelve people who were deciding her fate. She would either be allowed to continue her education and graduate in the spring as a fully licensed physician, or she would be expelled and sent home in disgrace.

Dean Edith Kreutzer was a celebrated trailblazer in the crusade to get women admitted to the medical profession, but this morning she had looked as cold as an ice queen as she convened the college’s Board of Trustees to determine Julia’s fate.

Julia curled her fingers around the rim of the hard bench, the only furniture in the small foyer outside the conference room. Every impulse urged her to stand and press her ear to the paneled door to hear the board’s discussion, but she forced herself to sit still. There was nothing she could do to influence the board’s decision.

It didn’t matter how badly she wanted to become a doctor. Or that she ranked at the top of her class in academics and was eager to go out and be a physician in some of the poorest areas of the world. All that mattered was what she did last weekend.

It was Saturday morning when all the trouble began. Like all Saturdays, she was working at the college’s pharmaceutical laboratory alongside six other ladies enrolled in medical school. As part of her coursework in pharmacology, she was making cinchonine pills by grinding the powder to the right consistency and pouring the medication into the tiny aluminum molds. At first she paid no attention to the intermittent bits of noise coming from outside the window, but finally a spray of pebbles hit the window glass and got her attention.

From the second-story window, she recognized the two young men standing in the slushy yard below. They worked for the Philadelphia Fire Department, and she knew them from Fairmount Park, where she and her classmates sometimes escaped to play tennis in balmy weather or go skating in the winter. Ross McKinney had a fine toboggan he often loaned her to go barreling down the slope when it snowed. The fireman and his friend seemed like decent young men, and she loved careening down the hillside on their toboggan.

She tugged up the window sash, chilly air flooding the room as she leaned outside. If you hurl any more rocks at this window, I’ll suspect you of being one of those tedious revolutionaries who rattle sabers and threaten to storm the ramparts.

Neither man laughed. One of them cradled a dog in his arms. Even from the second story, Julia could tell the dog was horribly mangled.

I’ll be right down, she said, slamming the window sash so hard the glass rattled.

The dog was a Boston terrier. One of her ears was partially torn off; her face was full of puncture wounds. Julia wanted to wince and look away, but doctors didn’t have that luxury and neither did she.

Have you got any drugs that might fix her up, Miss Broeder? Ross asked.

It would take more than drugs to fix this dog. That ear was going to need to be anchored back on with a row of stitches, and even then she wasn’t sure it could be saved. It was a Saturday, so the operating room at Olsen Hall should be available. The room was locked, but locked doors had never stopped Julia in the past. If one avenue was closed to her, she would go over, under, or around the obstacle until she reached her goal. In this case, it was by standing on the shoulders of one of the firemen to slip through the unlocked window of the operating room and then traveling through the darkened hallways to let the men, dog, and two of her classmates in through the front door of the building.

None of them had treated a dog before, but surely the principles of suturing a wound, cleaning to prevent infection, and stitching mangled flesh together were the same. Ross’s friend had to dash off to his shift at the fire station, but Ross stayed and stroked the dog’s flank, murmuring soothing words while Julia held a mask over the dog’s snout, gently squeezing the rubber ball that fed a stream of anesthesia to the terrier.

Treating the dog’s wounds took almost an hour, but she was satisfied with her work by the end. The dog would make a fine recovery.

After replacing the vials of anesthesia, antiseptic, and the suturing kit, she asked her classmates to sign her out of the pharmacy rotation for the day and accompanied Ross to the trolley stop, the slumbering dog heavy in her arms. The dog weighed at least twenty pounds, most of it pure muscle, but Julia refused to let Ross take it from her arms.

There was a bench at the trolley stop, but she was too nervous to sit. The clock on the bank tower across the street indicated she had nine minutes until the next trolley heading to the fire station would arrive. It was a good thing her classmates had not followed her to the trolley stop, for she was more likely to get the truth if Ross didn’t have to own up to it in front of an audience.

Where did you get this dog? she asked. It hadn’t escaped her notice that aside from the wounds she’d treated today, there were plenty of healed scars on the dog’s chest, legs, and snout.

He’s my roommate’s dog, Ross said. You’ve never met Derrick. He works at the fire station, too.

And does he fight this dog regularly?

Ross’s mouth tightened. She’s a good dog. Fighting is natural for her, and she doesn’t usually get dinged up this bad.

Julia rocked the slumbering dog in her arms, cradling it almost like a baby. What did she know about Ross McKinney other than he was fun company at the park and that he was generous with his toboggan?

The odds were strong that if she released the animal back into his custody, this mangled, victimized dog would be forced into the fighting ring again. Ross’s trolley wasn’t due to arrive for another eight minutes, but the Red Line trolley had just rounded the bend on its electric rails and was heading straight toward them.

If she boarded the oncoming trolley, she could get the dog to safety. It had been a big risk to break into the clinic, but the deed was done, and it seemed atrocious to turn the dog back over to the brutes who had done this to her in the first place. Julia bit her lip, indecision giving her the start of a pounding headache.

The Red Line trolley would be here in ten seconds.

She had already done her duty by treating an injured animal. And Ross wasn’t an altogether bad man. Clearly he cared for the dog or he wouldn’t have looked so stricken when he flung those pebbles at her window.

Six seconds.

Ross must have noticed her watching the trolley’s imminent arrival. Here, I’ll take her now if you want to head back to the college.

Three seconds, two seconds . . .

The trolley slowed, and the driver pulled a lever to open the doors. This was it.

She kept her eyes on the driver as she boarded the trolley.

Hey! Ross shouted. That’s my dog!

The slumbering animal made it awkward to fumble for the lever controlling the door, but Julia managed to yank it shut before Ross could board.

This dog has been badly mistreated, she said to the driver. Please hurry. That man has no business owning a dog.

The driver hesitated only a split second before nodding in agreement and setting off down the street.

Dean Kreutzer discovered her transgression the following day when Ross and three friends from the fire station arrived at the college to ask for their dog back. They denied using the dog for fighting, but when Julia refused to turn over the injured animal, Ross threatened to get his friends from the police department involved.

Dean Kreutzer insisted Julia produce the dog. You have already broken the rules by conducting an operation without supervision, the dean said tightly, going white around her lips. She ordered Julia from the office to go fetch the terrier.

Instead, Julia absconded with the dog to the train station, and an hour later she was heading toward the convent of the Sisters of Mercy outside of Philadelphia. The convent was located amid rolling hills and dairy farmland, a world away from the tough streets of Philadelphia. The dog rested on her lap the entire journey, staring transfixed at the countryside beyond the window. Had this dog ever seen countryside like this before? It might have been Julia’s imagination, but it seemed the dog breathed easier as they moved deeper into the rural farmlands.

In any event, Julia left the dog at the convent, where the sisters agreed to care for it until they could place the dog in a decent home.

Upon returning to the college, Julia found two members of the Philadelphia Police Department waiting for her. When she refused to tell them or Dean Kreutzer what she’d done with the dog, a disciplinary hearing was ordered for the following Wednesday.

So now she sat on this hard wooden bench, awaiting her fate. She had been given an opportunity to address the board, but the charge was an ethical violation for the theft of a dog, and she couldn’t deny that she was guilty as charged. Nor could she state with a clear conscience that she regretted her actions, which was what they needed to hear from her.

Julia had wanted to become a medical missionary ever since she was twelve years old and had pulled down a volume of The Travels of Marco Polo. Her world had changed forever. That creaky old leather volume, filled with hand-colored prints and maps of the Far East, sparked a spirit of adventure that lit her soul to this day. She dreamed of caravans traveling the Silk Road, of the austere beauty of the windswept Mongolian plains, of the perfumed gardens of Kublai Khan. She dreamed of someday seeing these lands with her own eyes, and why shouldn’t she? She could combine her love of science with the craving for adventure by becoming a medical missionary.

Medical missionaries weren’t charged with teaching the Bible or converting the natives. Julia would be useless in such a capacity, but by working in faraway places that had never seen a formally trained doctor, her life would be an example of Christian charity and selfless acts of service.

The unlatching of the door broke the silence of the room as Dean Kreutzer emerged. Julia stood, wondering if the others would follow, but the dean was alone, her steel-gray hair upswept into a stiff bouffant, her lips tight.

Dean Kreutzer closed the door. Miss Broeder, it is the unanimous decision of the board that you lack the maturity and judgment to proceed with your education here. You are asked to leave the college immediately.

The blood drained from her face. The room tilted. Until this very second she hadn’t truly believed they would expel her. How should a person react when every hope, ambition, and dream was crumbling into ash? For the first time in her life, Julia didn’t know what to do or say. She stood rooted to the

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